Adult education teachers can use this tool to evaluate web sites they visit or want to use with students. Students can also use the checklist to assess website quality for their own uses.

Websites are evaluated using a four-point rubric on 17 criteria in three domains:

Content Validity (e.g., Is the information current?);

Authority or Authorship of Source (e.g, Can you identify the author as well known and respected in field?); and

Technical Quality (e.g., Is the site easy to navigate?)

Scores are added and divided by the total items scored (NA scores are not counted). The quotient produces a rating based on the following scale:

3.50 – 4.00 Excellent resource

3.00 – 5.50 Good resource

2.50 – 3.00 Possible resource

Permission is granted to adapt or use the checklist as needed.

What the Experts Say:

Digital Citizenship is a recognized concept across the world focusing on the norms of appropriate, responsible behavior with regard to technology use. Being able to evaluate a website is an element of the Nine Themes of Digital Citizenship that students should know and be able to do. This resource effectively prepares students to carry out that important task.

This tool should be, at the minimum, a recommended piece of any Digital Literacy training course. Now, more than ever, teachers and students must be able to distinguish between valid websites and not just how professional a website looks.

The resource could be used by teachers and, in some cases by adult learners to evaluate website quality. The process of evaluating a website is often engaging, sometimes frustrating when it isn’t clear how to judge a characteristic with the information provided on the website, but that is good practice for adult learners (and teachers) to develop critical thinking skills.

This is a simple tool for teachers and/or adult learners to use to evaluate websites, especially the quality of the information provided on a website. It is straightforward, efficient and, perhaps best of all, permission is granted for a teacher to adapt it for her/his own purposes and students. This means that teachers can simplify or clarify the evaluative language if they need to, add questions, or in other ways adapt the tool to suit their needs.

This site includes links to information created
by other public and private organizations. These links are provided
for the user’s convenience. The U.S. Department of Education does
not control or guarantee the accuracy, relevance, timeliness, or
completeness of this non-ED information. The inclusion of these
links is not intended to reflect their importance, nor is it
intended to endorse views expressed, or products or services
offered, on these non-ED sites.

Please note that privacy policies on non-ED sites may differ from
ED’s privacy policy. When you visit lincs.ed.gov, no personal
information is collected unless you choose to provide that
information to us. We do not give, share, sell, or transfer any
personal information to a third party. We recommend that you read
the privacy policy of non-ED websites that you visit. We invite you
to read our privacy policy.

LINCS Information

Related Sites

Follow Us

Disclaimer: The LINCS System is maintained under contract with
CivicActions with
funding from the U.S. Department of Education (ED), Office of Career,
Technical, and Adult Education (OCTAE), under Contract No. ED-EVP-O-16-F-0001.
The opinions expressed herein do not necessarily represent the positions or
policies of the U.S. Department of Education, and no official endorsement by
the U.S. Department of Education should be inferred.